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Data from Exploiting the Therapeutic Interaction of WNT Pathway Activation and Asparaginase for Colorectal Cancer Therapy

Authors :
Alejandro Gutierrez
Lukas E. Dow
Kimmie Ng
Marios Giannakis
Ewa Sicinska
Chen Yuan
Martin Stanulla
Florence Wagner
Joshua R. Sacher
Connor McGuckin
Salmaan Karim
Sabine Schreek
Emma M. Schatoff
Teng Han
James Degar
Roxane Labrosse
Laura Hinze
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Colorectal cancer is driven by mutations that activate canonical WNT/β-catenin signaling, but inhibiting WNT has significant on-target toxicity, and there are no approved therapies targeting dominant oncogenic drivers. We recently found that activating a β-catenin–independent branch of WNT signaling that inhibits GSK3-dependent protein degradation induces asparaginase sensitivity in drug-resistant leukemias. To test predictions from our model, we turned to colorectal cancer because these cancers can have WNT-activating mutations that function either upstream (i.e., R-spondin fusions) or downstream (APC or β-catenin mutations) of GSK3, thus allowing WNT/β-catenin and WNT-induced asparaginase sensitivity to be unlinked genetically. We found that asparaginase had little efficacy in APC or β-catenin–mutant colorectal cancer, but was profoundly toxic in the setting of R-spondin fusions. Pharmacologic GSK3α inhibition was sufficient for asparaginase sensitization in APC or β-catenin–mutant colorectal cancer, but not in normal intestinal progenitors. Our findings demonstrate that WNT-induced therapeutic vulnerabilities can be exploited for colorectal cancer therapy.Significance:Solid tumors are thought to be asparaginase-resistant via de novo asparagine synthesis. In leukemia, GSK3α-dependent protein degradation, a catabolic amino acid source, mediates asparaginase resistance. We found that asparaginase is profoundly toxic to colorectal cancers with WNT-activating mutations that inhibit GSK3. Aberrant WNT activation can provide a therapeutic vulnerability in colorectal cancer.See related commentary by Davidsen and Sullivan, p. 1632.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1611

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3aa49176de370c6f0d97ccfed657309c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.c.6547729.v1